2 7) Price competition in oligopoly will A) damage technical efficiency. B) increase industry profit if demand is inelastic. C) reduce industry profit. D) hurt consumers. 7) 8) In Figure 14.1, the firm is in monopolistic competition. Some evidence that the diagram represents the short run, not the long run, is that A) the MR curve cuts the ATC curve from below. B) the firm is making an economic profit. C) the MR curve and the D curve do not coincide. D) the firm is taking an economic loss. 8) 9) In Figure 14.1, the firm is in monopolistic competition. During the transition to the long run, the demand curve will shift A) leftward and the MR curve will shift leftward. B) rightward and the MR curve will shift rightward. C) rightward and the MR curve will shift leftward. D) leftward and the MR curve will shift rightward. 9) 10) If a firm in monopolistic competition faces the demand curve pictured in Figure 14.1, A) its short-run economic profit will be zero. B) new firms will enter the industry. C) some firms will exit the industry. D) it will produce 60 units. 10) 11) If another firm enters the market and makes a product that is similar to the product of the firm shown in Figure 14.1, then the excess capacity of the firm shown in Figure 14.1 A) will decrease. B) could increase, decrease, or stay the same. C) will increase. D) will not change. 11)

3 12) In Figure 14.2, the firm currently has A) excess capacity of 10 units. B) excess capacity of 15 units. C) no excess capacity. D) excess capacity of 25 units. 12) 13) In the long run, a firm in a monopolistically competitive industry produces where the slope of the average total cost curve is A) zero. B) negative. C) equal to the marginal cost. D) positive. 13) 14) In long-run equilibrium for a monopolistically competitive firm, A) marginal cost exceeds price. B) price exceeds marginal cost. C) price exceeds average cost. D) average cost exceeds price. 14) 15) An example of an industry with monopolistic competition is A) phone service. B) the automobile industry. C) wheat farming. D) the restaurant industry. 15) 16) A firm in monopolistic competition must have some degree of price-setting power because A) it can never earn less than normal economic profit. B) it must lower its price in order to sell a greater quantity. C) the price it charges is never more than marginal cost. D) it earns, at best, normal economic profit. 16) 17) When economic profit is positive in an industry that is monopolistically competitive, firms will A) enter the industry, and demand will increase for the original firms. B) exit the industry, and demand will increase for the firms that remain. C) enter the industry, and demand will decrease for the original firms. D) exit the industry, and demand will decrease for the firms that remain. 17)

4 18) Figure 14.1 could represent the long-run equilibrium for a A) perfectly competitive firm. B) firm facing inelastic demand at all outputs. C) monopolistically competitive firm. D) monopoly. 18) 19) The four-firm concentration ratio gives, for the four largest firms in an industry, the percentage of A) economic profit. B) the value of sales. C) accounting profit. D) employment. 19) 20) If a market is shared equally by 100 firms, the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index is A) 100. B) 1/50. C) 50. D) 1/ ) 21) Suppose there are five firms in the disposable diaper market. Hug-Meʹs share is 30 percent. Plumperʹs share is 30 percent. Drippyʹs share is 20 percent. Kool Kidʹs share is 10 percent. Nappomaticʹs share is 10 percent. The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index in this industry is A) 100. B) 900. C) D) ) 22) A low concentration ratio indicates A) that wages are a high share of costs. B) a high degree of competition. C) a high degree of monopolization. D) that wages are a low share of costs. 22) 23) The national concentration ratio A) overestimates monopoly power for the newspaper industry and underestimates it for the automobile industry. B) underestimates monopoly power for both the newspaper and the automobile industries. C) underestimates monopoly power for the newspaper industry and overestimates it for the automobile industry. D) overestimates monopoly power for both the newspaper and the automobile industries. 23)

5 24) An industry with a high concentration ratio may have little monopoly power if A) its barriers to entry are low. B) there are no close substitutes for its product. C) its production is geographically concentrated. D) it has a high ratio of value added to sales. 24) 25) Over the years the U.S. economy has become increasingly A) monopolistic. B) competitive. C) cartelized. D) oligopolistic. 25) 26) A characteristic of monopolistic competition is A) a high capital-output ratio. B) a low ratio of fixed to variable costs. C) the absence of advertising. D) product differentiation. 26) 27) In the long run, a firm in a monopolistically competitive industry sets price equal to A) marginal cost but not average cost. B) neither marginal cost nor average cost. C) average cost but not marginal cost. D) average cost and marginal cost. 27) 28) Excess capacity and high advertising expenditures are costs of A) perfect competition. B) oligopoly. C) monopolistic competition. D) monopoly. 28) 29) In monopolistic competition, advertising costs A) can result in the firm producing an amount of output such that its average total costs are lower than if it did not advertise. B) are fixed costs. C) shift the ATC curve upward. D) All of the above answers are correct. 29) 30) In monopolistic competition, a firmʹs advertising A) increases the firmʹs average total cost. B) has no effect on demand. C) has no effect on its average cost curves. D) increases the firmʹs marginal cost. 30) 31) If a firm spends $600 on advertising, its A) ATC curve shifts upward and its MC curve does not shift. B) ATC and MC curves shift upward. C) ATC curve shifts upward and its MC curve shifts downward. D) MC curve shifts upward and its ATC curve does not shift. 31) 32) Expenditures on advertising. A) are variable costs so do not affect the average total cost B) always lower average total cost because whenever a firm advertises, it increases the quantity sold C) cannot lower average total cost because when a firm advertises it increases its costs D) can lower average total cost if the advertising increases the quantity sold by a large enough amount 32)

6 33) A textbook publisher is in monopolistic competition. The firm can sell no books at $100 a book, but for each $10 cut in price, the quantity of books it can sell increases by 20 books a day. The firmʹs average variable cost and marginal cost is a constant $30 per book. What is the publisherʹs profit-maximizing level of output? A) 120 books per day B) 60 books per day C) 100 books per day D) 80 books per day 33) 34) A textbook publisher is in monopolistic competition. The firm can sell no books at $100 a book, but for each $10 cut in price, the quantity of books it can sell increases by 20 books a day. The firmʹs average variable cost and marginal cost is a constant $30 per book. What is the publisherʹs profit-maximizing price? A) $60 B) $40 C) $50 D) $70 34) 35) A textbook publisher is in monopolistic competition. The firm can sell no books at $100 a book, but for each $10 cut in price, the quantity of books it can sell increases by 20 books a day. The firmʹs average variable cost and marginal cost is a constant $30 per book. What is the firmʹs markup? A) $30 B) $50 C) zero D) $10 35) 36) A textbook publisher is in monopolistic competition. The firm can sell no books at $100 a book, but for each $10 cut in price, the quantity of books it can sell increases by 20 books a day. The firmʹs total fixed cost is $2,400 a day. Its average variable cost and marginal cost is a constant $30 per book. What is the firmʹs maximum economic profit? A) $400 B) -$400 C) $1,000 D) zero 36) 37) A textbook publisher is in monopolistic competition. If the firm spends nothing on advertising, it can sell no books at $100 a book, but for each $10 cut in price, the quantity of books it can sell increases by 20 books a day. The firmʹs total fixed cost is $2,400 a day. Its average variable cost and marginal cost is a constant $30 per book. If the firm spends $1,200 a day on advertising, it can increase the quantity of books sold at each price by 50 percent. If the publisher advertises, its profit maximizing level of output is A) 80 books per day. B) 160 books per day. C) 120 books per day. D) 100 books per day. 37) 38) A textbook publisher is in monopolistic competition. If the firm spends nothing on advertising, it can sell no books at $100 a book, but for each $10 cut in price, the quantity of books it can sell increases by 20 books a day. The firmʹs total fixed cost is $2,400 a day. Its average variable cost and marginal cost is a constant $30 per book. If the firm spends $1,200 a day on advertising, it can increase the quantity of books sold at each price by 50 percent. If the publisher advertises, its profit maximizing price is A) $70. B) $60. C) $50. D) $40. 38) 39) Game theory is applicable to oligopoly behavior because A) oligopolists can only be profitable if they collude. B) oligopolists use strategic behavior. C) oligopolists are price takers. D) oligopolists ignore rival firms. 39)

7 Player B Confess Donʹt Confess Player A Confess A: 3 years B: 3 years A: 1 year B: 10 years Donʹt Confess A: 10 years B: 1 year A: 2 years B: 2 years 40) The table above shows the payoff matrix for a prisonersʹ dilemma game. The Nash equilibrium is that A) prisoner A confesses while prisoner B does not confess. B) both prisoners confess. C) prisoner A does not confess while prisoner B confesses. D) both prisoners do not confess. 40) 41) The problem for the prisoners in the prisonersʹ dilemma game in the above table is that A) neither prisoner has a workable strategy. B) there is no equilibrium outcome. C) the Nash equilibrium is not the best outcome for the prisoners. D) ALL of the above 41) Student 2 Work Donʹt work Student 1 Work Donʹtwork 1: +10 1: +5 2: +10 2: +5 1: +5 1: 0 2: +5 2: 0 42) Two students are assigned a group project. Each has the option to work or not work to achieve a high grade. The payoffs are shown in the above table. Student 1 should A) not work regardless of what student 2 decides. B) work only if student 2 works. C) not work if student 2 works. D) work regardless of the decision made by student 2. 42) Firm 2 Sell Give away Firm 1 Sell Give away 1: $3 1: $4 2: $3 2: -$1 1: -$1 1: $2 2: $4 2: $2 43) Two software firms have developed an identical new software application. They are debating whether to give the new application away free and then sell add-ons or sell the application at $30 a copy. The payoff matrix is above and the payoffs are profits in millions of dollars. What is Firm 1ʹs best strategy? A) Give away the application regardless of what Firm 2 does. B) Give away the application only if Firm 2 sells the application. C) Sell the application at $30 a copy regardless of what Firm 2 does. D) Give away the application only if Firm 2 gives away the application. 43)

8 44) Antitrust laws attempt to A) establish minimum wages. B) enforce fair trade laws. C) support prices at high levels so firms can earn profits. D) prevent monopolies or collusion. 44) 45) Antitrust law is the law that regulates and prevents them from becoming. A) monopolistically competitive firms; oligopolies B) monopolies; oligopolies C) oligopolies; monopolistically competitive firms D) oligopolies; monopolies 45) 46) The first antitrust law passed was the. A) Clayton Act B) Sherman Act C) Federal Trade Commission Act D) Robinson-Patman Amendment 46) 47) The Clayton Act of 1914 was passed to prohibit, in part, A) business practices that allow one firm to profit at the expense of another whenever the first firm is a monopoly. B) price discrimination if the effect is to substantially lessen competition or create monopoly. C) combinations, trusts, or conspiracies that restrict interstate or international trade. D) unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive business practices. 47) 48) The iphone 5 no longer comes pre-loaded with Google Maps and uses the Apple map application instead. Regulators might be concerned with this requirement because they might see it as an example of A) resale price maintenance. B) a tying arrangement. C) collusion to create a monopoly. D) predatory pricing. 48) 49) If McDonaldʹs, Wendyʹs, and Burger King agree with each other not to sell hamburgers for less than $2.95 apiece, all three could be found guilty of A) price fixing under the Sherman Act. B) an interlocking directorship under the Clayton Act. C) a deceptive business practice under the Clayton Act. D) None of the above answers is correct. 49) 50) Suppose that two clothing manufacturers, Frederickʹs Fashions and Stephanʹs Styles, announce that they plan to merge. The Herfindahl-Hirschman index is currently 1,500. After the merger, the HHI will rise to 1,560. This market is A) moderately concentrated and because the merger increases the HHI by more than 50 points, the government will definitely challenge the merger. B) competitive and so the government will not challenge the merger. C) highly concentrated and so the government will definitely challenge the merger. D) moderately concentrated, but because the merger increases the HHI by less than 100 points, the government will probably not challenge the merger. 50)

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